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IRIN Africa | Southern Africa | ZIMBABWE | ZIMBABWE: MSF gets go-ahead to help victims of urban cleanup | Democracy-Food Security-Health-Human Rights-Refugees IDPs-Other | News Items
Monday 26 December 2005
 
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ZIMBABWE: MSF gets go-ahead to help victims of urban cleanup


[ This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]



©  IRIN

Displaced families at Hopely Farm will now benefit from MSF assistance

JOHANNESBURG, 3 Oct 2005 (IRIN) - The government of Zimbabwe and Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) Holland have signed an agreement allowing the international NGO to provide medical assistance to people displaced two months ago during Operation Murambatsvina ('Drive out Filth'), the government's controversial clean-up campaign.

Health minister David Parirenyatwa told IRIN that the agreement would allow MSF medical and relief teams to begin operations in the Whitecliffe, Hopely and Hatcliffe areas around the capital, Harare. He said the government was aware that many displaced families were facing problems and lacked access to food, water and sanitation facilities.

"The agreement allows MSF to work in conjunction with the Harare city council's health department. Staff from the department will be attached to MSF health teams in the affected areas," Parirenyatwa told IRIN.

Steve Hide, the MSF head of mission in Zimbabwe, said he expected conditions similar to those in camps around Epworth and Chitungwiza, also near Harare, where MSF had ongoing programmes.

"We have not been allowed into the new areas as yet, but we expect the situation to be equally bad: poor sanitation, the lack of ablution facilities and the absence of basic healthcare services are still the major challenges in any displaced people's camp," Hide commented. "We will be providing clean water, ablution facilities and mobile clinic services for five days every week."

MSF already had two mobile clinics offering basic medical care to an estimated 200 people a day in the Chitungwiza and Epworth areas.

Hide said MSF was expecting to find between 700 and 1,000 families in each of the displaced camps. The offer of assistance came in the wake of reports that homeless families were returning to the high-density surbubs from where they had been evicted.

In Bulawayo, Zimbabwe's second largest city, over 200 displaced people had reportedly returned to informal settlements in the Richmond and Cowdray Park areas. The government-run housing programme to accommodate victims of Operation Murambatsvina was lagging far behind its stated targets because of serious cash flow and material constraints.

[ENDS]


 Theme(s) Democracy-Food Security-Health-Human Rights-Refugees IDPs-Other
Other recent ZIMBABWE reports:

UN "puzzled" by govt response to model house,  21/Dec/05

Health budget fails to address brain drain,  16/Dec/05

Police raid independent radio station,  16/Dec/05

MDC factions unable to resolve differences,  15/Dec/05

Authorities return media owner's passport,  14/Dec/05

Other recent Democracy-Food Security-Health-Human Rights-Refugees IDPs-Other reports:

ZIMBABWE: UN hopes for greater access to displaced, 15/Aug/05

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